Energy Justice News 

Energy justice builds upon the environmental justice and climate justice movement’s outstanding work to protect the human right to a clean and healthy environment and fight against corporate extraction and pollution of our precious resources. Energy justice includes racial, economic, and social justice together in its aim to end energy burdens and inequities. It is crucial that we are able to critically look at our energy system, and analyze where our energy comes from, who uses it, and what exploitation lies in the current system.

If you like what you're reading, subscribe to our energy justice email list today!

February 2023

January 2023

December 2022

November 2022

October 2022

August 2022

July 2022

June 2022 Bonus!

June 2022

 April 2022

December 2021

November 2021

 

DYK: Small scale solar creates 10-times more jobs per megawatt than utility scale solar?
Sierra Club Hawaiʻi Chapter Sierra Club Hawaiʻi Chapter

DYK: Small scale solar creates 10-times more jobs per megawatt than utility scale solar?

Solar power creates a lot of jobs, more than any other type of energy (see how they compare here). But some types of solar projects create a lot more jobs than others. According to the Solar Foundation National Solar Jobs Census for 2020, small-scale solar projects, including residential, commercial, and community solar, supported a total of 124,594 jobs in 2020. Utility-scale installations only supported 30,017 jobs.

Read More
The main squeeze: How localized energy can chart a new course for energy equity
Sierra Club Hawaiʻi Chapter Sierra Club Hawaiʻi Chapter

The main squeeze: How localized energy can chart a new course for energy equity

Localism, the emphasis on valuing and prioritizing local and small-scale phenomena, is growing globally and domestically. There has been recent growth of localist movements, in both high- and low-income countries, that has occurred against the backdrop of an increasingly globalized economy that is widely experienced as distant, “corporate,” exploitative, extractive, depersonalized, inequitable, and beyond local influence. There have been several localist movements across industries and sectors that challenge this economic paradigm. We will uncover energy production's contribution to this growing movement in the context of the climate crisis.

Read More
Energy justice in the news
Sierra Club Hawaiʻi Chapter Sierra Club Hawaiʻi Chapter

Energy justice in the news

National:

Behind the blackout triggered by Hurricane Fiona is a long-embattled history of Puerto Rico’s weak and outdated electrical grid; Manchin ends pipeline push, easing path for spending bill; EPA Launches New Environmental Justice Office

Local:

Hawaiian Electric Buys Tree-Burning Biomass Generator; Larry Ellison Wants Off Lanai’s Electric Grid. That Could Be A Problem For Everyone Else

Read More
Spotlight: AES West Kauaʻi pumped hydro + solar project diverts millions of gallons from Waimea River
Sierra Club Hawaiʻi Chapter Sierra Club Hawaiʻi Chapter

Spotlight: AES West Kauaʻi pumped hydro + solar project diverts millions of gallons from Waimea River

Kauaʻi Island Cooperative and AES global power corporation are planning to build a “pathbreaking” energy project that will provide 35 megawatts of utility scale solar and hydro power at a rate of $71.60 per megawatt-hour for 25 years. Due to the nature of the project, it will also require capacity payments of almost $9million per year. But apart from the economic costs, it is critical to take a step back and look at the impacts a project at this scale will have on streams and communities that depend on them.

Read More
Word of the month: Localism
Sierra Club Hawaiʻi Chapter Sierra Club Hawaiʻi Chapter

Word of the month: Localism

Localism: (noun) The belief that services should be controlled and provided, or goods produced and bought, within a local area for the benefit of people in that area.

Read More
Follow the carbon + Special Invite!
Sierra Club Hawaiʻi Chapter Sierra Club Hawaiʻi Chapter

Follow the carbon + Special Invite!

Halloween is just around the corner, which means big box stores will be full of costumes and holiday “fast fashion,” which are particularly energy intensive with an extremely high carbon footprint. Not to mention how wasteful and toxic these goods are when considering their full life-cycle.

Read More
Learn more: Listen
Sierra Club Hawaiʻi Chapter Sierra Club Hawaiʻi Chapter

Learn more: Listen

Local Energy Rules podcast: Public Power Pt. 3

Ingredients For Success.: Cities want to provide affordable, reliable service to their residents, but for-profit electric utilities won’t give up their monopolies without a fight.

Read More